Detection of disease-associated microglia among various microglia phenotypes induced by West Nile virus infection in mice

In this study, we examined the diversity of microglia phenotypes caused by WNV infection by assessing various microglia markers and identified disease-associated microglia in WNV-infected mouse brain tissue. Cells positive for general microglia markers such as Iba1, P2RY12, or TMEM119 were detected in the control and WNV-infected brain tissue. The morphology of the positive cells in brain tissue infected by WNV was different from that of control brain tissue, indicating that WNV infection induced activation of microglia. The activated microglia were classified into various phenotypes by investigation of specific marker expression. Among the activated microglia, disease-associated microglia that were positive for CD11c and weakly positive for TMEM119 were detected close to the WNV-infected cells. These results indicate that WNV infection induces activation of diverse microglia phenotypes and that disease-associated microglia may be associated with the pathogenicity of WNV infection in the mouse brain.
Source: Journal of NeuroVirology - Category: Neurology Source Type: research